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80
Jul 18, 2011
07/11
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CSPAN2
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maryland, business editor at npr. skip over our speaker for a moment, over the podium as well, melissa sharp with new silk media. she is our fantastic speakers committee chair. skip over our second speaker for a moment, the key to seem to press secretary with the natural resources defense council. also the organizer of today's event. we thank you for that, bob. we are told that it is a vote and we are awaiting another guest of the speaker, congressman brad miller of north carolina. then moving on down, andrea stone, correspondent for "huffington post." glow is washington director of reporters without borders and a vital member of our press freedom member and al isley is editor at large who tells me been blogging for "huffington post" since day one. now please a large amount of applause for everyone. [applause] >> if there were a king and queen of online journalism, our headline to a guest speakers could be considered candidates for members of the royal family. when tim armstrong and arianna huffington announced aol's
maryland, business editor at npr. skip over our speaker for a moment, over the podium as well, melissa sharp with new silk media. she is our fantastic speakers committee chair. skip over our second speaker for a moment, the key to seem to press secretary with the natural resources defense council. also the organizer of today's event. we thank you for that, bob. we are told that it is a vote and we are awaiting another guest of the speaker, congressman brad miller of north carolina. then moving...
101
101
Oct 25, 2011
10/11
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CSPAN2
tv
eye 101
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according to a website rankings, tmz ranks above tbs news.com, bloomberg.com, politico and npr. our guest is had a passenger in which continues to unfold and we're thankful it brought him here today. they graduate from university of chicago law school and was a litigator any major legal firm in l.a. but he also was a working journalist in the trenches. he spent more than a decade as an investigative reporter in los angeles, covered in high profile court cases. he received nine emmy awards for his reporting and the columnist of the "l.a. times" as a reader talk shows. egret and produced the syndicated series celebrity justice, helped bring us tv shows like the people's court and moral court. he has convicted a to talk about the tmz empire, why tmz and tmz wannabes are so successful and what it means for the future of journalism. the issues that we're going to discuss today could not be more timely. journalism enterprise of all kinder time get handle on the question, what is the right model in the digital age? and our guest speaker appears to have hit on something, to say the leas
according to a website rankings, tmz ranks above tbs news.com, bloomberg.com, politico and npr. our guest is had a passenger in which continues to unfold and we're thankful it brought him here today. they graduate from university of chicago law school and was a litigator any major legal firm in l.a. but he also was a working journalist in the trenches. he spent more than a decade as an investigative reporter in los angeles, covered in high profile court cases. he received nine emmy awards for...
75
75
Feb 22, 2011
02/11
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 75
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so, i think, for me, senator, the biggest, there are a number of factors npr identifies. for me it is, interconnectedness more than anything. if you fail, what else happens? who else gets hurt? and, it may be that we need to do the type of two-step process so we're basing on some simple metrics based on size and counterparty exposures. take it to a second level and ask those entities to do what is called a credit exposure report in title two. basically do analysis. do a scenario if you fail what happens. in terms of systemic that is the most important factor to me. there are some that will be obvious and that's why we need to know who they are in advance to have standards and have them start reducing any concentrations they might that would have broader collateral impact. there will be some gray areas but at least in terms of resolution planning i would err on the side of inclusiveness. >> mr. chairman, chairman bernanke, all of you are chairman to a point. let's see. do you believe that you're better positioned now than you were two years ago to deal with the failure of
so, i think, for me, senator, the biggest, there are a number of factors npr identifies. for me it is, interconnectedness more than anything. if you fail, what else happens? who else gets hurt? and, it may be that we need to do the type of two-step process so we're basing on some simple metrics based on size and counterparty exposures. take it to a second level and ask those entities to do what is called a credit exposure report in title two. basically do analysis. do a scenario if you fail...